I know there is a downward force at the center of the wire of 539 newtons. Also, the upward components of applied force at either end is 269.5 newtons. However, I do not know where to go from there.
I know there is a downward force at the center of the wire of 539 newtons. Also, the upward components of applied force at either end is 269.5 newtons. However, I do not know where to go from there.
Both ends of the rope are attached to some sort of pole. Because the downward force is acting in the middle of the wire, the two poles would share the upward force equally. So, 539/2= 269.5.
So, would it be 2*T*sin(theta)=539 where theta is the angle T makes with the horizontal?
In the y-direction, yes.
so,
or,
Now all you have to do is figue out .
Something that is pretty neat is if you look at the above equation, as gets smaller and smaller, the tension gets bigger and bigger. This is why you can never pull a string completely straight (=0) if there is any mass on it. Try it. Go get a long piece of string, a small mass, and a buddy. Put the mass in the middle of the string and see if you and your buddy can pull the string taunt.
BTW, for some perspective, that high wire is about half a football field long! The tightrope walker weighs as much as my wife. And it sags down a distance almost twice her height.
I would argue that the wire could not sag without stretching—that the weight of the tightrope walker would cause the wire to increase in length. Such would yield a little more than a half-meter increase in the wire’s total length; instead of ShawnBradley‘s 1771 N, the result would be 1791 N.
I would argue that the wire could not sag without stretching—that the weight of the tightrope walker would cause the wire to increase in length. Such would yield a little more than a half-meter increase in the wire’s total length; instead of ShawnBradley‘s 1771 N, the result would be 1791 N.